Exposed: Black History L.A.Main MenuLos Angeles African American Civic LeadersLos Angeles African American Civic LeadersDesegregating Los AngelesDesegregating Los AngelesCircumstances of Living in Los AngelesCircumstances of Living in Los AngelesNational Leaders in Los AngelesNational Leaders in Los AngelesLoren MillerTom & Ethel Bradley CenterAbout the Bradley CenterTom & Ethel Bradley Center15df6c919fb8109fe0c90d2933e2bce1cb5fe395http://www.csun.edu/bradley-center
Claude Hudson (center), the son of a Louisiana slave, devoted his life to civil rights. Hudson enrolled in dental school at Howard University and practiced dentistry in Los Angeles on Central Ave. While at Howard, in 1905, he met white and black students who were trying to improve the lives of blacks. Once they tried to meet in a hotel at Niagara Falls. Since no hotel on the American side would rent to them they stayed on the Canadian side and called themselves the Niagara Movement. No one knew what the Niagara Movement meant, so in 1910, they changed the name to the NAACP.
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